Finished reading a book called Marcus the Roman, about a
roman who happens to be in Jerusalem at the time of the
crucifiction of Christ. The book provides an interesting
speculation (its pure fiction) about how the events at the
time may have been experienced by some of the
contemporaries, and is as such very interesting.

Lots of stuff at work, so much to do, so little time. I
think I need to learn myself to take the necessary time to
prioritize my actions on a given day. Friday I fixed a bug
in the search engine which has bugged me for a long time,
so that was positive.

I'm involved in a software process workgroup at work,
where
I have been made responsible for constructing a software
requirements specication template for use in our company.
We have agreed to use the basic layout from Karl
Wiegers "Software requirements", but I'm wondering what's
a "typical" amount of standardization in that regard in
software companies in general. I guess it's really just a
matter of trying some alternatives until you find something
that works in the specific context of your organization.

We have started playing some quake arena at office,
it's
good with some fast-paced action once in a while :-)

Oh, and I bought Dead Man on dvd - Neil Youngs
soundtrack
for that movie is so cool, so cool.

Btw, I think lkcl's and others work on
dce/rpc support is great. I think of their work as one of
the few examples of a really constructive effort to
increase the long-term viability of Linux as a server
platform.